On 2003-02-21, Shlomi Fish wrote: > I do hope it becomes available, but don't know the issues involved. When > the Technion decided to teach the book "Computation Structures" from MIT > Press, in the course "Logic Design" it received or licensed a few > simulators from MIT. Now those simulators were for DOS, and came in > binary only. And they actually suck quite a bit. > Ouch. I remember them. When I studied it (3 years ago) there were acltually two simulators: for DOS and for windows. The windows one was user-friendly (no powerful commands to confuse you) and 10-20 times slower yet the the DOS one, so nobody used it. I applaud their ability to write a simulator of a simple assembler that would be unberable to wait for (minutes(?)) when runing a thousand-cycle loop :-----)
> At least students and faculty of universities can work on open-source > projects (sometimes at the university's facilities) without the university > being able to make a claim for it. > Great! I was a little afraid that they can have some claims if I work a lot in the farms (conveniently, they don't have up-to-date Python installed anywhere so lately I always work at home :-). -- Beni Cherniavsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Do not feed the Bugzillas. ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]